Active bald eagle nest destroyed in Texas; reward now $15,000

The nest, being utilized by a mating pair of bald eagles, was first detected by a concerned citizen on property being developed as a subdivision.

Federal and state authorities in Texas are still hoping to bring to justice the person responsible for destroying an active bald eagle nest last year north of Dallas.

On Thursday, the Center for Biological Diversity announced that it has increased the reward for information leading to a conviction in the case from $1,500 to $15,000.

“I’m outraged by the destruction of this eagle nest, and the perpetrator needs to be brought to justice for harming America’s national bird,” Will Harlan, a senior scientist at the Center, stated in a news release. “Whoever committed this cowardly act should be held accountable.”

The nest was first detected by a “concerned citizen” in February 2023 on private property being developed as a subdivision. A Texas game warden noted at the time that two adult eagles were using the nest.

Photo: ©Pete Thomas

Days later, special agents with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service confirmed that the nest had been destroyed. It was not clear if the eagles were raising chicks at the time.

Bald eagles, which mate for life, use the same nests year after year and build on them over time.

Bald eagles and their nests are protected under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act and the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act. Destroying an active nest could carry significant criminal penalties, including prison time.

Anyone with potentially helpful information is asked to contact the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Texas at 817-334-5202, or the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department at 800-792-4263.

–Generic bald eagle images courtesy of ©Pete Thomas

Bald eagle nests are massive, and this beauty is a high-rise

Bald eagle nests come in various shapes and sizes, and it seems as though one nest in Vancouver is beginning to resemble a high rise.

Bald eagle nests come in various shapes and sizes, and one nest in Vancouver is beginning to resemble a high-rise.

“Look at mama bald eagle at the top of this nest – one of the biggest I’ve seen!” Pacificnorthwestkate tweeted on Tuesday. “Every year more sticks get added.”

To be sure, the eagle family Kate has observed is moving up. She told FTW Outdoors that the nest measures about 15 feet tall “and it’s getting bigger every year.”

According to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, the largest bald eagle nest on record, in St. Petersburg, Fla., was 20 feet tall and 10 feet in diameter.

The Lab’s All About Birds website states that a nest in Vermilion, Ohio, was famous for being shaped like a wine glass. It weighed nearly two metric tons and was used for 34 years “until the tree blew down.”

Replica of a typical bald eagle nest at Hueston Woods State Park

In 2021, the Forest Park Nature Center in Illinois shared an image showing a ranger sitting inside a scale-model of a typical nest, measuring 5 feet wide and 3 feet deep.

The image revealed how an ordinary bald eagle nest would look if it were not partially hidden by branches. (The replica nest is housed at Hueston Woods State Park in Ohio.)

Bald eagle guards nest from a treetop. Photo: ©Pete Thomas

A nest that I’ve been observing, in east San Diego County, is of the typical variety and has been used for years by the same bald eagle pair.

I’ve included two recent images – one showing an adult eagle guarding the nest from the treetop, and another showing a newly hatched chick next to a watchful parent.

Newly hatched chick stands under a parent’s watchful eye. Photo: ©Pete Thomas

The ungainly youngster revealed its fuzzy head Sunday as I was about to leave my observation point.

Bald eagle chicks fledge after 10-12 weeks. After they fledge, immature bald eagles can travel great distances in search of a preferred territory.

From All About Birds: “Immature bald eagles spend the first four years of their lives in nomadic exploration of vast territories and can fly hundreds of miles per day.

“Some young birds from Florida have wandered north as far as Michigan, and birds from California have reached Alaska.”

Bald eagle attain their classic regal appearance, with white crowns and tail feathers, after about five years.

–Follow Pacificnorthwestkate on Instagram